Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Are We Ready Now?

This is my response after reading a blog here which I feel has much relevance to us. http://sethgodin.typepad.com/seths_blog/2009/01/in-the-mood.html

"And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works: Not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as the manner of some is; but exhorting one another: and so much the more, as ye see the day approaching." (Hebrews 10: 24-25 ).

There has been assertions made that the Church has entered the last hour of the last day, and the apocalyptic age is no longer approaching but is actually upon us. So this scripture is even more relevant to us than before.

How shall we characterise this age? This is an age of information and of knowledge (Daniel 12:4). With widespread emphasis of education, and advent of internet, information is freely available on just about anything 'under the sun'. With the fingers doing the walking or searching a patient can research into his therapy or medication in deeper depth than his physician. Ditto a church member could amass more information on a number of biblical topics than his pastor cares to find out. This is the age of information. Everyone has the potential to be a proficient knowledge worker.

This is also the age of complacency. Technology advances have also brought along a certain level of material comfort and security. Add to that much knowledge and a degree of pride that tends to follow divorces us from the need to return to God. We have the knowledge of good and evil. We can make make our own informed choices. We understand the mysteries of genetics and make nanobots work on our behalf. We are on the verge of cloning for organ replacements. In church, we are often critical of church leader's decisions, finding much to criticise yet with little constructive to offer. We say we are rich. We say we lack not. (Revelations 3:17)

Another sign of our times would be characterized by apathy. The hearts of many would grow cold. When surrounded by evil and sin at every turn, instead of arousing a response from us, we are like the frog in a pot of lukewarm water over a slow fire. We are so comfortable with the surroundings until we end up as frog soup. Our complacency and apathy lead us down the road compromise one after another (Mathew 24:12). This lukewarm church is a sign of our times.

The last thing a cancer sufferer in pain needs is much information about the nature, risks and danger of the chemotherapy he has to go through. It is true some basic information need to be given to the patient, but a cold clinical presentation of facts and figures often just leave the patient demoralised and results in outright rejection or sub-optimal outcome from the therapy. The patient needs, more than anything, to be motivated; he needs inspiration, a belief, a hope that would help him overcome his deepest pain and look forward to the cure.

Similarly the malaise of our lukewarm church cannot be counteracted by more teaching, more knowledge or more information which would just subfocate. I dare say the average church member has enough biblical knowledge to rival a pastor of rural church in some third world country already. We do not lack knowledge per se. Even if we lack any, knowledge can be augmented with the help of google search. What we do lack is real passion. What have lost our first love. What we do need is a motivation and be inspiration to love God and to serve Him. We are need to see is a fresh vision of our Lord. To see His purpose and calling for us, to be touched and compelled.

Now that God has allowed the world and our financial systems to crumble and disintegrate around us, let us know that His coming is near. Let's not forsake the meeting together and fellowship. Notice the verse doesn't say let's meet together, so the pastor can teach us. But it says 'we' are to meet and fellowship and to exhort, encourage, provoke one another to love and good works. It is down to all of us to stand up and be counted. Our fellowship should not be focused on ourselves and become an opportunity to garner sympathy for our 'hardships', to ventilate our angst, but to focus on Jesus. We meet to consider one another and inspire good works, to motivate each other to evangelize, to seize the day to finish the great commission as the day is now upon us. Enough firewood already, let's fan the fire instead!

"Where there is no vision, the people perish" (Proverbs 29:18).

PS : when was the last time we had a revival meeting in our church, or has it gone out of fashion?

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